Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T07:29:04.298Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Association between women’s empowerment and infant and child feeding practices in sub-Saharan Africa: an analysis of Demographic and Health Surveys

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2015

Muzi Na*
Affiliation:
Center for Human Nutrition, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, W2041, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA
Larissa Jennings
Affiliation:
Social and Behavioral Interventions Program, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
Sameera A Talegawkar
Affiliation:
Center for Human Nutrition, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, W2041, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA
Saifuddin Ahmed
Affiliation:
Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
*
* Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective

To explore the relationship between women’s empowerment and WHO recommended infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices in sub-Saharan Africa.

Design

Analysis was conducted using data from ten Demographic and Health Surveys between 2010 and 2013. Women’s empowerment was assessed by nine standard items covering three dimensions: economic, socio-familial and legal empowerment. Three core IYCF practices examined were minimum dietary diversity, minimum meal frequency and minimum acceptable diet. Separate multivariable logistic regression models were applied for the IYCF practices on dimensional and overall empowerment in each country.

Setting

Benin, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

Subjects

Youngest singleton children aged 6–23 months and their mothers (n 15 153).

Results

Less than 35 %, 60 % and 18 % of children 6–23 months of age met the criterion of minimum dietary diversity, minimum meal frequency and minimum acceptable diet, respectively. In general, likelihood of meeting the recommended IYCF criteria was positively associated with the economic dimension of women’s empowerment. Socio-familial empowerment was negatively associated with the three feeding criteria, except in Zimbabwe. The legal dimension of empowerment did not show any clear pattern in the associations. Greater overall empowerment of women was consistently and positively associated with multiple IYCF practices in Mali, Rwanda and Sierra Leone. However, consistent negative relationships were found in Benin and Niger. Null or mixed results were observed in the remaining countries.

Conclusions

The importance of women’s empowerment for IYCF practices needs to be discussed by context and by dimension of empowerment.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2015 

Despite the global trend of improved child nutritional status, 28 % of children under the age of 5 years are still stunted in low- and middle-income countries( Reference Black, Victora and Walker 1 ). The prevalence of stunting is the highest in sub-Saharan Africa where approximately 40 % of children are affected( Reference Black, Victora and Walker 1 ). The risk of child undernutrition increases remarkably from 3 to 24 months of age( Reference Victora, de Onis and Hallal 2 ). This is because it is typically a period of time when suboptimal infant and young child feeding (IYCF) is practised, including lack of exclusive breast-feeding in the first 6 months, early introduction of complementary foods, and insufficient quality and quantity of complementary foods. Although the mechanisms are complex, suboptimal child feeding practices are well recognized as one of the leading causes of child undernutrition( Reference Black, Allen and Bhutta 3 ). Intervention trials have also provided strong evidence that promoting adequate complementary feeding for children aged 6–23 months is key to reducing child stunting( Reference Dewey and Adu‐Afarwuah 4 , Reference Lassi, Das and Zahid 5 ).

The WHO recommends that infants be exclusively breast-fed for the first 6 months and then receive nutritionally adequate and safe complementary foods with continued breast-feeding up to 2 years of age or beyond( 6 ). Adherence to these optimal feeding practices in many low- and middle-income countries is unsatisfactory. Only one in three or one in six 6–23-month-old children in sub-Saharan Africa were fed adequately diverse or overall acceptable diets, respectively( Reference Lutter, Daelmans and de Onis 7 ).

Women’s empowerment is one of the key factors mediating intra-household resources towards optimal child-care behaviours and better nutritional outcomes( Reference Ruel and Alderman 8 ). Initial evidence indicates that women who are more empowered are more likely provide their young children with appropriate breast-feeding( Reference Shroff, Griffiths and Suchindran 9 , Reference Bose 10 ) and complementary feeding practices such as giving complementary foods at the appropriate age( Reference Smith, Ramakrishnan and Ndiaye 11 ), increasing the number of meals( Reference Smith, Ramakrishnan and Ndiaye 11 ) and feeding with nutritious foods( Reference Bose 10 , Reference Smith, Ramakrishnan and Ndiaye 11 ).

Empowerment is commonly defined as ‘the expansion of people’s ability to make strategic life choices in a context where this ability was previously denied to them’( Reference Kabeer 12 ). Women’s empowerment involves the ability to influence decision making in many life aspects such as economic, socio-cultural, familial and interpersonal, and legal dimensions( Reference Lee-Rife 13 , Reference Malhotra and Schuler 14 ). Economically empowered women are more involved in income-generating activities and in control over finances, and often have significant control over food purchases, either to their children’s benefit( Reference Schmeer 15 , Reference Begin, Frongillo and Delisle 16 ) or to the improvement of their own diet( Reference Basu and Koolwal 17 ) or nutritional status( Reference Smith, Ramakrishnan and Ndiaye 11 ). Studies in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia have shown that the amount of money controlled by women is positively correlated with the amount of money spent on child-centred purposes, such as health care( Reference Smith, Ramakrishnan and Ndiaye 11 , Reference Quisumbing and Maluccio 18 ). Women’s socio-familial empowerment is characterized by their freedom of mobility and decision making regarding interpersonal or family affairs. Socio-familial empowerment enhances the ability to acquire resources, such as information and support from friends and relatives. Women with lower socio-familial empowerment are at higher risk of being unhealthy( Reference Grown, Gupta and Pande 19 ) and mentally depressed or injured( Reference Forte, Franks and Forte 20 ) as the result of limited access to reproductive health services( Reference Bloom, Wypij and Gupta 21 Reference Ahmed, Creanga and Gillespie 23 ) and higher risk of domestic violence( Reference Ludermir, Lewis and Valongueiro 24 ). Poor physical and mental health may indirectly hinder provision of timely, independent and proper feeding and child care. Legal empowerment refers to one’s property rights over assets, such as land and houses. Securing women’s property rights is seen as a tool to promote welfare and well-being of the women themselves and their children through increased agricultural productivity, intra-household bargaining power and financial security( Reference Quisumbing and Maluccio 18 , Reference Saito, Mekonnen and Spurling 25 , Reference Datta 26 ). Previous evidence has suggested a connection between women’s legal empowerment and better child nutrition( Reference Allendorf 27 ). As a multidimensional construct, women’s empowerment can be linked to IYCF practices by multiple direct and indirect pathways (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1 Conceptual framework linking economic, socio-familial and legal women’s empowerment with infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices

Women’s empowerment may play an important role in appropriate IYCF practices. Yet the association is conditioned on many other maternal, household and community factors, such as maternal time constraints and social beliefs and norms about feeding practices( Reference Stewart, Iannotti and Dewey 28 ) (Fig. 1). For example, empowered women may enjoy more freedom to participate in the job market and to move around in their leisure time, but they may have less time available for child care and feeding( Reference Hazir, Akram and Nisar 29 Reference Sethuraman, Lansdown and Sullivan 32 ). Therefore, the direction of the association between women’s empowerment and IYCF practices may be difficult to predict and may vary by context. A deeper understanding of setting-specific relationships between women’s empowerment and IYCF practices is greatly needed.

Population-based evidence has suggested a positive relationship between maternal empowerment and better child nutritional status( Reference Carlson, Kordas and Murray‐Kolb 33 , Reference Cunningham, Ruel and Ferguson 34 ), as well as the relationship between appropriate IYCF practices and better child nutritional outcomes( Reference Marriott, White and Hadden 35 , Reference Arimond and Ruel 36 ). However, little is known about how the various dimensions of women’s empowerment influence IYCF practices. Therefore, the goal of the present study was to examine the association between women’s empowerment status, by dimension and overall, and the uptake of WHO recommended IYCF practices in sub-Saharan African countries.

Methods

Sampling

Ten countries in sub-Saharan Africa were included in these analyses: Benin, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Uganda and Zimbabwe. The following inclusion criteria were used for country selection: (i) having conducted a Phase 6 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) in the year 2010 or later; (ii) having included the women’s status module with questions regarding control over income, household decision making, attitudes towards domestic violence and asset ownership; and (iii) having included the IYCF module with questions regarding breast-feeding status, complementary feeding practices and milk feeding frequency.

The sample was restricted to the youngest singleton child aged 6–23 months in the household who was alive at the time of study interview and living with the respondent, who was a married woman of reproductive age (15–49 years) living with her husband or partner at the time of survey. Following these inclusion criteria, the final sample size for each country was: n 1908 (Benin); n 2090 (Burkina Faso); n 969 (Ethiopia); n 1004 (Mali); n 743 (Niger); n 4744 (Nigeria); n 1311 (Rwanda); n 1162 (Sierra Leone); n 849 (Uganda); and n 373 (Zimbabwe).

Infant and young child feeding practices

Three core IYCF indicators for appropriate complementary feeding were created to describe adherence to the WHO guidelines: minimum dietary diversity, minimum meal frequency and minimum acceptable diet (Table 1)( 37 ). Minimum dietary diversity was defined as children 6–23 months of age who received foods from at least four out of seven food groups during the past day. The seven food groups used to calculate the summed dietary diversity score were: grains, roots and tubers, legumes and nuts, flesh foods (i.e. meat, fish, poultry and organ meats), eggs, vitamin A-rich fruit and vegetables, other fruits and vegetables, and dairy products. The IYCF module in the DHS asked the respondent to report whether or not the child received each food or beverage using a pre-set list during the previous day. Positive responses were tallied by food group to create the dietary diversity score. Minimum meal frequency was defined as children 6–23 months of age who received solid, semi-solid or soft foods a minimum number of times in the previous day. The minimum required frequency varied by child age and breast-feeding status (Table 1). In the DHS, one question asked the respondent to state the number of times the child received solid, semi-solid or soft food in the past day. Three questions assessed the feeding frequency of infant formula, milk and yoghurt. These frequencies were used to calculate the number of milk feeds. Minimum acceptable diet, a combined indicator of the prior two, was defined differently for breast-fed and non-breast-fed children and for different age groups. The detailed criteria can be seen in Table 1. The three indicators were dichotomously coded 1 if the child’s feeding practice met the WHO recommendation or coded 0 if the feeding practice did not meet the recommendation.

Table 1 Definition of IYCF indicators by WHO guideline( 37 )

Food group score is calculated based on consumption of seven food groups: grains, roots and tubers, legumes and nuts, dairy products, flesh foods, eggs, vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables, and other fruits and vegetables.

Milk feeds are consumption of infant formula, milk such as tinned, powdered or fresh animal milk, and yoghurt.

§ Food group score is calculated based on consumption of six food groups, excluding dairy products for avoiding double counting of this food group in non-breast-fed children.

Women’s empowerment variables

In the women’s status module of the DHS Phase 6 survey, nine questions captured three dimensions of women’s empowerment: (i) economic empowerment (relative income to husband/partner, control over men’s income, control over women’s income, decision making on large household purchases); (ii) socio-familial empowerment (decision making regarding family visits, women’s own health, and attitude towards domestic violence under five scenarios); and (iii) legal empowerment (women’s judicial and legislative entitlements over land and over house). Following an established coding scheme( Reference Jennings, Na and Cherewick 38 ) we aggregated each item using dichotomous codes, with 1 indicating higher empowerment and 0 indicating lower empowerment. The summative dimensional sub-scores over items within each dimension and a total empowerment score over all nine items were calculated. The possible maximum scores for the dimensional sub-scores were 4, 3 and 2 for the economic, socio-familial and legal dimensions, respectively. The total empowerment score ranged from 0 to 9. Using DHS sample weights to adjust for probability differences in sample selection, we calculated the weighted mean and standard error of dimensional sub-scores and the total score for each country. For each empowerment dimension and total score, we categorized each woman as having either high or low empowerment based on whether her score fell above or below the country-specific weighted mean.

Control variables

Previous research has documented the association between women’s empowerment and education( Reference Woldemicael 39 ), household wealth( Reference Jejeebhoy 40 ) and number of living children( Reference Woldemicael 39 , Reference Thapa and Niehof 41 ). Across studies conducted in sub-Saharan Africa, poorer maternal education, lower household wealth and younger child age have been found to be determinants of suboptimal IYCF practices( Reference Issaka, Agho and Burns 42 Reference Victor, Baines and Agho 44 ). Given this, our analyses controlled for maternal age, maternal education, child age, child sex, number of living children, rural or urban residence and household wealth quintile as potential confounders.

Statistical analysis

The statistical software package STATA/SE version 13·1 was used to analyse data in the present study. All analyses were adjusted for complex survey design weight and design effect >1 due to the multistage stratified cluster sampling design of the DHS. Sample demographic characteristics, distribution of women’s empowerment and distribution of IYCF practices were all described adjusting for the complex survey design to represent the population proportion, mean and standard error. To study the association between women’s empowerment and IYCF practices, we applied bivariate and multivariable logistic regression models for each of the three IYCF practices by total empowerment status. Three binary dimensional empowerment variables were fitted in the unadjusted and adjusted models controlling for each other to examine the independent dimensional relationship with IYCF practices. The statistical significance level was set at P<0·05.

Results

Demographic characteristics and empowerment characteristics

The sample demographic characteristics are presented by country at maternal, child and household levels (Table 2). The mean age of women ranged from 27·8 to 30·3 years across countries. Maternal education levels varied largely: the proportion of women receiving at least primary education was lowest in Burkina Faso (16·6 %) and highest in Zimbabwe (98·6 %). Children on average were between 13·4 and 14·5 months of age, with a majority of them still being breast-fed (74·2–93·6 %). The study sample was predominantly rural in all countries (60·4–90·0 %). However, the wealth quintile within each country sample was not always evenly distributed. For example, about half of the sample in Ethiopia (47·1 %) and Sierra Leone (47·9 %) came from the poorest two quintiles, whereas more than half of the Niger sample (55·0 %) was from the richest two quintiles.

Table 2 Demographic characteristics by country; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

The distribution of women’s empowerment status is presented by dimensional sub-score and the total empowerment score for each country (Table 3). Across countries, the mean dimensional sub-score ranges were respectively 0·9–3·0, 0·6–2·3 and 0·4–1·6 for economic, socio-familial and legal empowerment. The mean total empowerment score was lowest in Mali (2·8 (se 0·07)) and highest in Zimbabwe (6·4 (se 0·09)).

Table 3 Distribution of women’s empowerment indicators by dimensional sub-score and total score in each country; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

Minimum dietary diversity

The mean dietary diversity score ranged from 1·4 in Burkina Faso to 2·7 in Benin and Rwanda (Table 4). Less than 35 % of children 6–23 months of age met the minimum dietary diversity of at least four food groups in the past day (6·4–35·3 %). As child age increased, they were more likely to be fed with minimum required dietary diversity in their diet.

Table 4 Distribution of IYCF practices by countryFootnote ; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

IYCF, infant and young child feeding; BF, breast-fed.

Data presented are percentages unless otherwise indicated; missing data ranges from 0 % 10·3 %.

The unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios (aOR) and 95 % CI are presented (Table 5 and Table 6, respectively) between women’s empowerment status and the three recommended IYCF practices by country. After controlling for confounders and the other two dimensional sub-scores (Table 6), women with higher economic empowerment were more likely to feed their children with the minimum required dietary diversity (aOR=1·05–1·43) as compared with women with lower economic empowerment in all countries except Benin (aOR=0·92; 95 % CI 0·74, 1·16), Ethiopia (aOR=0·75; 95 % CI 0·41, 1·37) and Zimbabwe (aOR=0·77; 95 % CI 0·41, 1·47). However, the association was significant only in Nigeria (aOR=1·40; 95 % CI 1·15, 1·70). In two countries, Benin (aOR=0·76; 95 % CI 0·61, 0·95) and Nigeria (aOR=0·80; 95 % CI 0·66, 0·98), there were significant negative associations between the socio-familial dimension and the likelihood of meeting the minimum dietary diversity. Legal empowerment showed various associations across countries. While significant positive adjusted associations were found in Mali (aOR=2·06; 95 % CI 1·49, 2·85), Nigeria (aOR=1·30; 95 % CI 1·10, 1·53) and Sierra Leone (aOR=1·65; 95 % CI 1·16, 2·35), a significant negative finding was observed in Niger (aOR=0·59; 95 % CI 0·39, 0·90). The total empowerment score had a significant and positive relationship in three countries: Burkina Faso (aOR=1·90; 95 % CI 1·26, 2·88), Mali (aOR=1·54; 95 % CI 1·13, 2·09) and Sierra Leone (aOR=1·78; 95 % CI 1·27, 2·51).

Table 5 Unadjusted odds ratios and 95 % CI of appropriate IYCF practices among children aged 6–23 months by women’s empowerment status; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

IYCF, infant and young child feeding.

*Significant at P<0·05.

Table 6 Adjusted odds ratios and 95 % CI of appropriate IYCF practices among children aged 6–23 months by women’s empowerment statusFootnote ; data from Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

IYCF, infant and young child feeding; aOR, adjusted odds ratio.

*Significant at P<0·05.

Confounders adjusted for include maternal age, maternal education, child age, child sex, number of living children, urban residence and household wealth index quintile.

Minimum meal frequency

Minimum meal frequency was achieved in 33·5–59·5 % of children (Table 4). In general, the proportion of children meeting this feeding criterion increased with child age, although a reverse trend was observed in Sierra Leone and Uganda. Data did not show any consistent trend by breast-feeding status.

Six of the ten countries demonstrated positive odds ratios (aOR=1·04–1·29) in the relationship between economic empowerment and the probability of meeting the minimum meal frequency criterion (Table 6). In Burkina Faso, women with higher economic empowerment were 29 % (aOR=1·29; 95 % CI 1·06, 1·58) more likely to feed children at least the minimum number of meals. However, more economically empowered women in Zimbabwe were 45 % less likely to provide a sufficient number of meals to their children (aOR=0·55; 95 % CI 0·31, 0·98). Three significant negative findings were found in Burkina Faso (aOR=0·80; 95 % CI 0·66, 0·98), Niger (aOR=0·57; 95 % CI 0·39, 0·84) and Nigeria (aOR=0·80; 95 % CI 0·68, 0·93) in relation to socio-familial empowerment. In contrast, a positive association in socio-familial empowerment and minimum meal frequency was observed in Zimbabwe (aOR=1·63; 95 % CI 1·01, 2·62). Significant negative and positive associations were observed in Benin (aOR=0·69; 95 % CI 0·56, 0·86) and Mali (aOR=1·57; 95 % CI 1·18, 2·09), respectively, between legal empowerment and minimum meal frequency. The total empowerment score was positively associated with minimum meal frequency in Mali (aOR=1·35; 95 % CI 1·03, 1·78) and Rwanda (aOR=1·33; 95 % CI 1·05, 1·69), but negatively associated with minimum meal frequency in Benin (aOR=0·79; 95 % CI 0·65, 0·95) and Niger (aOR=0·64; 95 % CI 0·47, 0·88) in the adjusted models.

Minimum acceptable diet

Of the children, 3·7–18·3 % were fed with minimum acceptable diet (Table 4). The likelihood of meeting this feeding criterion generally increased with child age, yet local decreases were seen between the 12–17 months and 18–23 months age group in Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Zimbabwe. No clear pattern was observable of meeting this criterion between breast-fed and non-breast-fed children.

Higher women’s economic empowerment was associated with higher likelihood of feeding a minimum acceptable diet (aOR=1·06–2·14) in all countries except Ethiopia (aOR=0·67; 95 % CI 0·33, 1·36). Significant adjusted results were observed in Nigeria (aOR=1·43; 95 % CI 1·11, 1·84) and Sierra Leone (aOR=2·14; 95 % CI 1·19, 3·85; Table 6). Negative associations (aOR=0·54–0·95) in socio-familial empowerment and minimum acceptable diet were found in six of the ten countries. However, only Nigeria showed a statistically significant negative result (aOR=0·58; 95 % CI 0·45, 0·74). In Zimbabwe, there was a significant positive association between women’s socio-familial empowerment status and minimum acceptable diet (aOR=2·27; 95 % CI 1·11, 4·64). The association between women’s legal empowerment and minimum acceptable diet varied by country. In Mali (aOR=2·28; 95 % CI 1·42, 3·67) and Sierra Leone (aOR=1·90; 95 % CI 1·16, 3·12), legally empowered women were approximately twice as likely to feed their children with a minimum acceptable diet; while in Benin, it was about 30 % less likely (aOR=0·72; 95 % CI 0·53, 0·97) to meet this feeding criterion. The total empowerment score was associated with increased likelihood of meeting the minimum acceptable diet in four countries: Burkina Faso (aOR=1·86; 95 % CI 1·11, 3·13), Mali (aOR=1·58; 95 % CI 1·00, 2·49), Rwanda (aOR=1·41; 95 % CI 1·01, 1·98) and Sierra Leone (aOR=1·90; 95 % CI 1·17, 3·09). However, the likelihood of meeting the minimum acceptable diet criterion was 24 % (aOR=0·76; 95 % CI 0·60, 0·97) and 45 % (aOR=0·55; 95 % CI 0·33, 0·93) less in women with higher overall empowerment in Benin and Niger, respectively.

Discussion

Using consistent measures in the DHS, we were able to explore and compare the associations between women’s empowerment status and IYCF practices in ten sub-Saharan African countries. Our study showed that the strength and direction of the relationship between women’s empowerment and complementary feeding practices varied by country and by dimension of empowerment.

The study’s findings indicated that independent of other dimensions, economic empowerment may have positive relationships with appropriate IYCF practices, although the adjusted associations were not significant in the majority of the countries. Higher women’s economic empowerment is expected to be associated with increased financial access to foods and increased food distribution to children. A study in the Philippines found that maternal contribution to household income and her control over her income were significantly related to increased weekly household food expenditure after controlling for covariates at individual and household levels( Reference Schmeer 15 ). Greater food expenditure may have increased women’s ability to purchase food and breast milk substitutes for young children( Reference Blau, Guilkey and Popkin 45 ). The benefit of increased income and control over income v. the cost of reduced time is often recognized as a trade-off between maternal employment and child care. Existing evidence suggests that the cost is more likely to outweigh the benefit during early infancy because working mothers may not be able to initiate breast-feeding( Reference Hazir, Akram and Nisar 29 , Reference Noble 46 ), to practise exclusive breast-feeding( Reference Setegn, Belachew and Gerbaba 30 ) or to breast-feed as long or frequently as needed( Reference Walker and Adam 47 Reference Ghosh, Mascie‐Taylor and Rosetta 49 ). Older children seemed to benefit more from their economically empowered mothers as seen from their better nutritional status compared with their counterparts of unemployed( Reference Lamontagne, Engle and Zeitlin 50 ) or less financially autonomous mothers( Reference Shroff, Griffiths and Adair 51 ). However, women with higher financial autonomy may prioritize other urgent family demands over children’s nutritional needs. In the Zimbabwean sample, where almost all women had at least primary education, we found that higher women’s economic empowerment significantly decreased the probability of providing the minimum required number of meals. Maternal characteristics, such as educational attainment, may modify how household financial resources are allocated between nutritional and non-nutritional needs. More research is needed to test the potential modifying effect of socio-economic factors on the association between women’s economic empowerment and IYCF practices.

Except for Zimbabwe, all statistically significant relationships between socio-familial empowerment and appropriate feeding practices were negative. A few mechanisms may help to explain the reverse direction. First, the association between socio-familial empowerment and IYCF practices may be conditioned on broader communal knowledge of IYCF practices. As women have more freedom to visit other families in the community, they may be more likely to engage in social networking with community members and exchange ideas and cultural beliefs on child-care practices. If the average local educational level is high, women may learn from each other on health and nutritional knowledge. Otherwise, they may be easily exposed to ‘wrong’ suggestions from the neighbourhood. In the current study, negative associations between higher socio-familial empowerment and better IYCF practices were found significant in Benin, Burkina Faso, Niger and Nigeria, where the proportion of primary education or higher was low at 28·5 %, 16·6 %, 22·4 % and 53·2 %, respectively. However, the only positive associations of empowerment to meal frequency and to acceptable diet were observed in Zimbabwe, where maternal education was nearly universal (98·6 %). Second, the indicators under the socio-familial dimension of the current study (freedom to visit family, to decide her own health, to be against domestic violence under unjustified situations) may more closely predict behaviours that benefit women’s own welfare rather than altruistic behaviours to benefit others in the family, such as children( Reference Basu and Koolwal 17 ). Previous research has found close links between women’s empowerment indicators that describe their own leisure and their own food consumption( Reference Basu and Koolwal 17 ). DHS data from thirty-one developing countries also showed that women’s autonomy to decide on her own health, compared with other empowerment indicators, had the strongest relationship with better maternal health-service utilization( Reference Ahmed, Creanga and Gillespie 23 ). Because there is a potential indirect link connecting women’s socio-familial empowerment, maternal sub-optimal nutritional status and health, and IYCF practices, the observed negative relationships may have been confounded by other uncontrolled factors.

In our study, both negative and positive associations were observed when examining legal empowerment. No consistent pattern could be captured in the relationship between legal empowerment and appropriate feeding behaviours across countries. Legal empowerment, as captured by women’s legitimate ownership over land and houses, is closely associated with women’s decision-making power in the household( Reference Allendorf 27 , Reference Schuler, Islam and Rottach 52 ) as well as protection against domestic violence( Reference Grown, Gupta and Pande 19 , Reference Grabe 53 ). It was not quite clear why women’s title to land and houses decreased their ability to feed children appropriately in Benin and Niger compared with similar women with no land or home ownership. Because asset inheritance rules can be complicated and vary across settings( Reference Kabeer 12 ), a dichotomous indicator on legal empowerment may be insufficient to tell apart de facto v. de jure entitlement in some countries, which influences women’s choice making and behaviour differently. In the context of devaluation of agriculture in India, Rao argued that granting land rights to women led to an increase of work burden without much improvements in their food security or social status( Reference Rao 54 ). Benin and Niger may have also undergone a similar shift in the valuation of land due to rapid population increase, slow growth in the agriculture sector and increased needs for diversifying livelihoods( Reference Rao 54 , Reference Fan, Omilola and Lambert 55 ).

Regarding overall empowerment, the direction of association was determined by the synergistic or antagonistic relationship among individual dimensional empowerment. In some countries, economic and socio-familial empowerment were negatively associated with the likelihood of appropriate feeding behaviours, which may help to explain the null relationships in overall empowerment. The insignificant associations also suggested that women’s empowerment alone may not be adequate to lead to appropriate IYCF practices in many sub-Saharan countries.

Because no single indicator is sufficient to summarize appropriate complementary feeding behaviours( 56 ), it is important to examine multiple IYCF practices simultaneously within each country. With few exceptions, we have observed consistent significant adjusted positive (Mali, Rwanda and Sierra Leone), negative (Benin and Niger) or null associations (Ethiopia and Uganda) between women’s empowerment indicators and multiple IYCF practices. The consistent direction of the associations implied correlations between IYCF practices and supported that the repeated relationships were not due to chance alone. Positive associations are in line with theoretical expectation and previous studies. In a multi-country study, pooling data from DHS 1990–1998 across thirty-six developing countries, Smith et al. observed that higher women’s decision-making power relative to their partners was associated with a slight but significant increase in daily meal frequency of children aged 6–36 months and the probability of receiving complementary foods of children aged 6–12 months in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa( Reference Smith, Ramakrishnan and Ndiaye 11 ).

The lack of significant findings in Ethiopia and Uganda may be due to several factors. Financial constraint was reported in formative research by Ethiopian( 57 ) and Ugandan mothers( Reference Mokori 58 ) as one of the major reasons not to feed children more meals with nutritious foods. About half of the Ethiopian sample was in the two lowest wealth index quintiles, which may help explain the null average relationship. In addition, beliefs, attitudes and expectation about appropriate IYCF practices were found to deviate widely from the current guidelines( 57 , Reference Hadley, Lindstrom and Belachew 59 ). For example, some nutrient-dense foods, such as meat and eggs, were considered unsuitable, ‘too strong’ or too hard to digest for young children. In Uganda, knowledge–practice discrepancies were found; mothers knew which complementary foods would be beneficial but lacked resources to put their knowledge into practice( Reference Wamani, Astrom and Peterson 60 ). Constrained by their resources, knowledge or both, even empowered women may not be able to adhere to recommended feeding practices. In both countries, men are expected to influence feeding decisions as the major supplier of money and food( 57 , Reference Mokori 58 , Reference Engebretsen, Moland and Nankunda 61 ). Women’s decision-making power relative to men, rather than the women’s absolute empowerment, may account for more of the differences in complementary feeding practices in the two countries, yet measures on relative empowerment are not available in the DHS.

There are a few limitations inherent in the DHS data. Only associations, rather than causalities, can be studied because of the cross-sectional design of the surveys. The inclusion criteria applied in the present study required data available on multiple measurements of women’s empowerment and IYCF practices. Generalizability of the study’s findings may only be to subjects who share similar characteristics. Although consistent methods were used in this multi-country analysis, caution is needed when comparing results from different settings as the DHS were not conducted in the same year and not all surveys included their country-specific questions in assessing IYCF practices. Future studies are needed to examine the association in other regions of the world, such as South Asia, where women’s status is low and child malnutrition is prevalent.

Conclusions

Poor complementary feeding practices to children 6–23 months of age were prevalent in the ten countries examined in sub-Saharan Africa. In general, mothers with higher economic empowerment were more likely to feed infants and young children with the minimum recommended dietary diversity and meal frequency. However, the associations in relation to socio-familial and legal empowerment need to be discussed under specific contexts as null findings and results opposite to theoretical expectations were found in several countries. The study highlighted the importance of maternal empowerment for appropriate child feeding behaviours. Future research should explore these relationships across other developing regions or study the context-specific mechanisms behind them.

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements: The authors acknowledge Dr Keith P West Jr at the Center for Human Nutrition, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, for his technical scope and general guidance; and Bess Lewis, MS, at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health for her critical comments on this manuscript. Financial support: The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, WA, USA (grant number GH 614) and the Sight and Life Research Institute, Baltimore, MD, USA provided financial support for the first author. The funders had no role in the design, analysis or writing of this article. Conflict of interest: None. Authorship: M.N. conceptualized the research question, obtained data sets, reviewed literature, conducted the analysis and drafted the first draft of the manuscript. L.J., S.A.T. and S.A. provided guidance and comments at the stage of study conception, literature review, data interpretation and manuscript editing. All authors have read and approved the final version of the paper and its submission. Ethics of human subject participation: This study was exempt as described in the guidelines issued by the Johns Hopkins Institutional Review Board.

References

1. Black, RE, Victora, CG, Walker, SP et al. (2013) Maternal and child undernutrition and overweight in low-income and middle-income countries. Lancet 382, 427451.Google Scholar
2. Victora, CG, de Onis, M, Hallal, PC et al. (2010) Worldwide timing of growth faltering: revisiting implications for interventions. Pediatrics 125, e473e480.Google Scholar
3. Black, RE, Allen, LH, Bhutta, ZA et al. (2008) Maternal and child undernutrition: global and regional exposures and health consequences. Lancet 371, 243260.Google Scholar
4. Dewey, KG & Adu‐Afarwuah, S (2008) Systematic review of the efficacy and effectiveness of complementary feeding interventions in developing countries. Matern Child Nutr 4, Suppl. 1, 2485.Google Scholar
5. Lassi, ZS, Das, JK, Zahid, G et al. (2013) Impact of education and provision of complementary feeding on growth and morbidity in children less than 2 years of age in developing countries: a systematic review. BMC Public Health 13, Suppl. 3, S13.Google Scholar
6. World Health Organization (2003) Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
7. Lutter, CK, Daelmans, BM, de Onis, M et al. (2011) Undernutrition, poor feeding practices, and low coverage of key nutrition interventions. Pediatrics 128, e1418e1427.Google Scholar
8. Ruel, MT, Alderman, H & Maternal and Child Nutrition Study Group (2013) Nutrition-sensitive interventions and programmes: how can they help to accelerate progress in improving maternal and child nutrition? Lancet 382, 536551.Google Scholar
9. Shroff, MR, Griffiths, PL, Suchindran, C et al. (2011) Does maternal autonomy influence feeding practices and infant growth in rural India? Soc Sci Med 73, 447455.Google Scholar
10. Bose, S (2011) The effect of women’s status and community on the gender differential in children’s nutrition in India. J Biosoc Sci 43, 513533.Google Scholar
11. Smith, LC, Ramakrishnan, U, Ndiaye, A et al. (2003) The Importance of Women’s Status for Child Nutrition in Developing Countries. Research Report no. 131. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute.Google Scholar
12. Kabeer, N (1999) Resources, agency, achievements: reflections on the measurement of women’s empowerment. Dev Change 30, 435464.Google Scholar
13. Lee-Rife, SM (2010) Women’s empowerment and reproductive experiences over the lifecourse. Soc Sci Med 71, 634642.Google Scholar
14. Malhotra, A & Schuler, SR (2005) Women’s empowerment as a variable in international development. In Measuring Empowerment: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives, pp. 7188 [D Narayan, editor]. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
15. Schmeer, KK (2005) Married women’s resource position and household food expenditures in Cebu, Philippines. J Marriage Fam 67, 399409.Google Scholar
16. Begin, F, Frongillo, EA Jr & Delisle, H (1999) Caregiver behaviors and resources influence child height-for-age in rural Chad. J Nutr 129, 680686.Google Scholar
17. Basu, AM & Koolwal, GB (2005) Two concepts of female empowerment: some leads from DHS data on women’s status and reproductive health. In A Focus on Gender: Collected Papers on Gender Using DHS Data, pp. 1554 [S Kishor, editor]. Calverton, MD: ORC Macro.Google Scholar
18. Quisumbing, AR & Maluccio, JA (2003) Resources at marriage and intrahousehold allocation: evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Indonesia, and South Africa. Oxf Bull Econ Stat 65, 283327.Google Scholar
19. Grown, C, Gupta, GR & Pande, R (2005) Taking action to improve women’s health through gender equality and women’s empowerment. Lancet 365, 541543.Google Scholar
20. Forte, JA, Franks, DD, Forte, JA et al. (1996) Asymmetrical role-taking: comparing battered and nonbattered women. Soc Work 41, 5973.Google Scholar
21. Bloom, SS, Wypij, D & Gupta, MD (2001) Dimensions of women’s autonomy and the influence on maternal health care utilization in a north Indian city. Demography 38, 6778.Google Scholar
22. Furuta, M & Salway, S (2006) Women’s position within the household as a determinant of maternal health care use in Nepal. Int Fam Plan Perspect 32, 1727.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
23. Ahmed, S, Creanga, AA, Gillespie, DG et al. (2010) Economic status, education and empowerment: implications for maternal health service utilization in developing countries. PLoS One 5, e11190.Google Scholar
24. Ludermir, AB, Lewis, G, Valongueiro, SA et al. (2010) Violence against women by their intimate partner during pregnancy and postnatal depression: a prospective cohort study. Lancet 376, 903910.Google Scholar
25. Saito, KA, Mekonnen, H & Spurling, D (1994) Raising the Productivity of Women Farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa. Report no. 230. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
26. Datta, N (2006) Joint titling – a win–win policy? Gender and property rights in urban informal settlements in Chandigarh, India. Fem Econ 12, 271298.Google Scholar
27. Allendorf, K (2007) Do women’s land rights promote empowerment and child health in Nepal? World Dev 35, 19751988.Google Scholar
28. Stewart, CP, Iannotti, L, Dewey, KG et al. (2013) Contextualising complementary feeding in a broader framework for stunting prevention. Matern Child Nutr 9, 2745.Google Scholar
29. Hazir, T, Akram, D, Nisar, YB et al. (2013) Determinants of suboptimal breast-feeding practices in Pakistan. Public Health Nutr 16, 659672.Google Scholar
30. Setegn, T, Belachew, T, Gerbaba, M et al. (2012) Factors associated with exclusive breastfeeding practices among mothers in Goba district, south east Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study. Int Breastfeed J 7, 17.Google Scholar
31. Batal, M, Boulghourjian, C & Akik, C (2010) Complementary feeding patterns in a developing country: a cross-sectional study across Lebanon. East Mediterr Health J 16, 180186.Google Scholar
32. Sethuraman, K, Lansdown, R & Sullivan, K (2006) Women’s empowerment and domestic violence: the role of sociocultural determinants in maternal and child undernutrition in tribal and rural communities in south India. Food Nutr Bull 27, 128143.Google Scholar
33. Carlson, GJ, Kordas, K & Murray‐Kolb, LE (2014) Associations between women’s autonomy and child nutritional status: a review of the literature. Matern Child Nutr (Epublication ahead of print version).Google Scholar
34. Cunningham, K, Ruel, M, Ferguson, E et al. (2015) Women’s empowerment and child nutritional status in South Asia: a synthesis of the literature. Matern Child Nutr 11, 119.Google Scholar
35. Marriott, BP, White, A, Hadden, L et al. (2012) World Health Organization (WHO) infant and young child feeding indicators: associations with growth measures in 14 low‐income countries. Matern Child Nutr 8, 354370.Google Scholar
36. Arimond, M & Ruel, MT (2004) Dietary diversity is associated with child nutritional status: evidence from 11 demographic and health surveys. J Nutr 134, 25792585.Google Scholar
37. World Health Organization (2010) Indicators for Assessing Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices: Part 2 Measurement. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
38. Jennings, L, Na, M, Cherewick, M et al. (2014) Women’s empowerment and male involvement in antenatal care: analyses of Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) in selected African countries. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 14, 297.Google Scholar
39. Woldemicael, G (2010) Do women with higher autonomy seek more maternal health care? Evidence from Eritrea and Ethiopia. Health Care Women Int 31, 599620.Google Scholar
40. Jejeebhoy, SJ (2000) Women’s autonomy in rural India: its dimensions, determinants, and the influence of context. In Women’s Empowerment and Demographic Processes: Moving Beyond Cairo, pp. 204238 [H Presser and G Sen, editors]. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
41. Thapa, DK & Niehof, A (2013) Women’s autonomy and husbands’ involvement in maternal health care in Nepal. Soc Sci Med 93, 110.Google Scholar
42. Issaka, AI, Agho, KE, Burns, P et al. (2015) Determinants of inadequate complementary feeding practices among children aged 6–23 months in Ghana. Public Health Nutr 18, 669678.Google Scholar
43. Aemro, M, Mesele, M, Birhanu, Z et al. (2013) Dietary diversity and meal frequency practices among infant and young children aged 6–23 months in Ethiopia: a secondary analysis of Ethiopian Demographic and Health Survey 2011. J Nutr Metab 2013, 782931.Google Scholar
44. Victor, R, Baines, SK, Agho, KE et al. (2014) Factors associated with inappropriate complementary feeding practices among children aged 6–23 months in Tanzania. Matern Child Nutr 10, 545561.Google Scholar
45. Blau, DM, Guilkey, DK & Popkin, BM (1996) Infant health and the labor supply of mothers. J Hum Resour 31, 90139.Google Scholar
46. Noble, S (2001) Maternal employment and the initiation of breastfeeding. Acta Paediatr 90, 423428.Google Scholar
47. Walker, AR & Adam, FI (2000) Breast-feeding in sub-Saharan Africa: outlook for 2000. Public Health Nutr 3, 285292.Google Scholar
48. Dennis, C (2002) Breastfeeding initiation and duration: a 1990–2000 literature review. J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs 31, 1232.Google Scholar
49. Ghosh, R, Mascie‐Taylor, C & Rosetta, L (2006) Longitudinal study of the frequency and duration of breastfeeding in rural Bangladeshi women. Am J Hum Biol 18, 630638.Google Scholar
50. Lamontagne, JF, Engle, PL & Zeitlin, MF (1998) Maternal employment, child care, and nutritional status of 12–18-month-old children in Managua, Nicaragua. Soc Sci Med 46, 403414.Google Scholar
51. Shroff, M, Griffiths, P, Adair, L et al. (2009) Maternal autonomy is inversely related to child stunting in Andhra Pradesh, India. Matern Child Nutr 5, 6474.Google Scholar
52. Schuler, SR, Islam, F & Rottach, E (2010) Women’s empowerment revisited: a case study from Bangladesh. Dev Pract 20, 840854.Google Scholar
53. Grabe, S (2010) Promoting gender equality: the role of ideology, power, and control in the link between land ownership and violence in Nicaragua. Anal Soc Issues Public Policy 10, 146170.Google Scholar
54. Rao, N (2006) Land rights, gender equality and household food security: exploring the conceptual links in the case of India. Food Policy 31, 180193.Google Scholar
55. Fan, S, Omilola, B & Lambert, M (2009) Public Spending for Agriculture in Africa: Trends and Composition. ReSAKSS Working Paper no. 28. Washington, DC: Regional Strategic Analysis and Knowledge Support System, International Food Policy Research Institute.Google Scholar
56. World Health Organization (2010) Indicators for Assessing Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices: Part 3 Country Profiles. Geneva: WHO.Google Scholar
57. Alive & Thrive (2010) IYCF Practices, Beliefs and Influences in the SNNP Region, Ethiopia. Addis Ababa: Alive & Thrive.Google Scholar
58. Mokori, A (2012) Nutritional status, complementary feeding practices and feasible strategies to promote nutrition in returnee children aged 6–23 months in northern Uganda. S Afr J Clin Nutr 25, 173179.Google Scholar
59. Hadley, C, Lindstrom, D, Belachew, T et al. (2008) Ethiopian adolescents’ attitudes and expectations deviate from current infant and young child feeding recommendations. J Adolesc Health 43, 253259.Google Scholar
60. Wamani, H, Astrom, AN, Peterson, S et al. (2005) Infant and young child feeding in western Uganda: knowledge, practices and socio-economic correlates. J Trop Pediatr 51, 356361.Google Scholar
61. Engebretsen, I, Moland, KM, Nankunda, J et al. (2010) Gendered perceptions on infant feeding in eastern Uganda: continued need for exclusive breastfeeding support. Int Breastfeed J 5, 13.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Conceptual framework linking economic, socio-familial and legal women’s empowerment with infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices

Figure 1

Table 1 Definition of IYCF indicators by WHO guideline(37)

Figure 2

Table 2 Demographic characteristics by country; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

Figure 3

Table 3 Distribution of women’s empowerment indicators by dimensional sub-score and total score in each country; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

Figure 4

Table 4 Distribution of IYCF practices by country†; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

Figure 5

Table 5 Unadjusted odds ratios and 95 % CI of appropriate IYCF practices among children aged 6–23 months by women’s empowerment status; data from Phase 6 Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013

Figure 6

Table 6 Adjusted odds ratios and 95 % CI of appropriate IYCF practices among children aged 6–23 months by women’s empowerment status†; data from Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2013